I posted this here:
http://tmlfans.ca/community/former-leafs-ex-files/wade-belak-found-dead/
http://tmlfans.ca/community/former-leafs-ex-files/wade-belak-found-dead/
Talks about depression sports-related, yet can apply to everyday life and situations. One things for sure: too much medication can also complicate a person's already delicate mental health state. No one ever mentions how prescription drugs can have untold side-effects and make the symptoms of what one suffers all the more worse.
Everyone needs some medication from time to time, but, it seems that it is being either overdone, or over-prescribed. There are different ways of dealing with mental health issues, and drugs aren't always the best mode of treatment.
I remember having read about Canadian actress Margot Kidder, who became famous for her role as "Lois Lane" opposite the late Christopher Reeves, in the "Superman" films. She was depressed for several years, then became a manic depressive, to the point where she began mutilating herself to the point of being near-suicidal. She had been prescribed medication after medication, to the point where these medications actually enhanced her problems rather than curtailing them.
Out of desperation, upon the advice of a friend, she sought the help of the late Abram Hoffer, a B.C. doctor specializing in orthomollecular medicine (still very much an unknown area in today's medical circles), who categorized her as having 'deficiencies' (mineral) and other "deficiencies', took her immediately off of the prescription medications, and in essence, to make a long story extremely short, cured her of her mental illness.
Today, (this happened a few years ago), she is a happy and proud grandmother of a hockey-playing grandson, exhibiting not a single mental health problem.
Perhaps this is a bit of a 'rarity, not necessarily that everyone would benefit from orthomollecular medicine a la the late Hoffer, who was the best in this field of study, but, it wouldn't hurt to at least find out or provide people with alternatives in lieu of drugs that may not always be the best therapy available.